Motherhood as Medicine: When Rest Becomes a Radical Act
In this episode of Wisdom Through Fire, we explore how life sometimes forces a reckoning when we refuse to slow down on our own.
I sit down with a psychotherapist and private practice owner whose identity was deeply rooted in productivity, caretaking, and achievement—until a high-risk twin pregnancy changed everything. As an African American woman, she carried not only two babies, but the very real fear shaped by alarming maternal mortality statistics for Black mothers in the United States. Working through burnout, medical risk, and the looming fear of death, her body demanded a pause she could no longer ignore.
What followed was a profound transformation. Forced rest became an act of survival. Slowing down quite literally saved her life—and the lives of her daughters. This conversation explores burnout, motherhood, mortality, identity, and the radical wisdom that emerges when we finally listen to our bodies.
This is a story about choosing life, challenging narratives of overwork, and discovering that sometimes the fire doesn’t destroy us—it teaches us how to live.
Josephine (Josie) Ampaw-Greene, LCSW, MFTC, ADDC, MA (she/her) is a therapist,speaker, educator, and group practice owner committed to equity, inclusion, andhealing. She works with individuals, couples, and families navigating identity-basedand relationship trauma, particularly those historically marginalized. Using aperson-centered, relational approach, Josie helps clients explore and heal theimpacts of systemic oppression and relational harm. She trains organizations onequity, inclusion, belonging, and clinical development, and serves as an AdjunctProfessor at the University of Denver. She also founded The Mental Health TherapistHub, supporting new clinicians in navigating the mental health profession.
Website Link: https://www.ampawpc.com/